An emissary from the future struggles to convince the next U.S. President to jump from an airliner, before it crashes, killing him and setting off a disastrous future. The candidate is alrea... Read allAn emissary from the future struggles to convince the next U.S. President to jump from an airliner, before it crashes, killing him and setting off a disastrous future. The candidate is already torn in several directions, elated from a big primary win, avoiding an interview by an ... Read allAn emissary from the future struggles to convince the next U.S. President to jump from an airliner, before it crashes, killing him and setting off a disastrous future. The candidate is already torn in several directions, elated from a big primary win, avoiding an interview by an aggressive reporter, excited by having his mistress on-board, with his frigid wife absent.... Read all
- Control Voice
- (voice)
- Staff Member
- (uncredited)
- Secret Service Agent
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Bruce Boxleitner and cast are excellent in this "will he or won't he" character study. Unlike other Outer Limits series, the plot moves along at an even clip. Most other OL episodes pad sucrose-laden dialog that does nothing to enhance its value other than add time to the hour long series.
Decompression is the exception to the rule. The pacing, dialog, and characters drive the plot, making it worthwhile to the very end. And make sure you watch it to the very end. You'll be glad you did.
First, the writers throw us a red herring, just like political campaigns do. The slick "populist" presidential candidate is having an affair, and there's a reporter on board the plane with them who just might notice! But, just like real campaigns, much more significant things are at stake, and, just like in real elections, no one seems overly interested in them. The reporter drops the real issue, about technology and privacy, which he uncovers in an aborted interview, as soon as the candidate starts behaving oddly.
The show maintains its suspense effectively. The audience knows something no one else but the candidate knows, and has to watch and see how he will handle the information, while trying to guess whether everyone else on board the plane is actually misreading the situation or not. The action is confined to a small, claustrophobic setting. The time traveler who unhinges the candidate is effectively unsettling, and the story she has to tell strikes the right balance between credibility and BS. The candidate, his staff, and the reporter all behave believably, if a little stereotypically, and the audience has plenty of foreshadowing to set up the "twist" ending.
This is one of the better Outer Limits episodes.
Did you know
- Quotes
[last lines]
The Control Voice: No idea is so strong it should not be tested by doubt, and no man so powerful that he is infallible.